Disruptive Entrepreneurship
MDST 2011
Disruption has become a hallowed achievement in contemporary business culture. What, exactly, do entrepreneurs, investors, and Internet evangelists mean by the word? What have been the great disruptions of our time, and who wound up disrupted?
This course is a hands-on exploration of disruption as a practice and a theory, which goes to the heart of contemporary society. We will encounter disruptions in the world around us and devise some of our own. Students should expect to enlarge their entrepreneurial repertoires, but also to experience fresh trepidation about disruption's possible consequences.
Instructor
Nathan Schneider (“Nathan” or “Professor Schneider”)
nathan.schneider@colorado.edu
Armory Building, 1B24
Office hours: Wednesday at 3-5 p.m., or by appointment (via email)
Website: www.lelandquarterly.com
Objectives
- Gain familiarity with discourses surrounding media entrepreneurship and disruptive innovation
- Encounter the social impacts of economic disruptions
- Cultivate habits of ethical entrepreneurship in media economies
The business model
The course consists of six evaluated components; three are consecutive “phases” and three are ongoing.
Phase one: Report
20 percent
Early in the course, each student produces a brief, researched report on a past disruption. Write an internal memo by an employee of an incumbent organization as it comes to terms with a potentially threatening disruption taking place. Examples of incumbent organizations include large corporations, governance agencies, and cultural institutions. Explain the disruption clearly to colleagues and suggest possible responses that their organization might take. The report should be between 1,200 and 1,500 words, formatted and written appropriately (and creatively) in the guise of an official document from the organization. Evaluation criteria are as follows:
- Completion of the assignment with clarity, stylistic correctness, and creativity
- Comprehension of the disruption and explanation of what qualifies it as disruptive
- Evidence of self-directed research beyond assigned materials, including at least two peer-reviewed scholarly sources and relevant market data, using appropriate citation
Phase two: Presentation
20 percent
The second project for the course is a presentation to the class about the human impacts of a disruptive innovation. Each student should interview at least one person (outside the CU community) whose way of life or livelihood has been threatened by the disruption. In the presentation, students will share interviewees' insights, alongside an explanation of the nature of the disruption and its broader context. This assignment is conducted in groups of 3-4, who will present 10-minute presentations with slides.
Each presentation should cover a unique topic. Evaluation criteria are as follows:
- Completion of the assignment with clarity, stylistic correctness, and creativity
- Comprehension of the disruption, including its history, market dynamics, and what qualifies it as disruptive
- Insightful interviews in disrupted communities by each student (duly credited), along with contextual data on social impacts
Phase three: Whitepaper
25 percent
At the conclusion of the course, students produce a whitepaper outlining an original proposal for a disruption involving networked digital media. It can advance business, social, or policy goals. In between 1,500 and 1,800 words, describe the nature of the disruption, its economic and technological context, and the means of its financing and growth. Be sure to also consider its potential social effects.
Students will twice present their ideas to the class—first as a one-minute practice run for feedback and, second, as a one-minute pitch with one parsimonious slide.
Evaluation criteria are as follows:
- Completion of the assignment with clarity, stylistic correctness, and creativity
- Comprehension of the disruption and explanation of what qualifies it as disruptive
- Evidence of self-directed research beyond assigned materials, including at least two peer-reviewed scholarly sources and relevant market data, using APA citation
- Clear, compelling in-class pitch with an elegant slide
Quizzes
15 percent
Quizzes based on readings and lectures will occur at random intervals during class using Canvas. Quizzes are meant to be taken individually, in class, without referencing external materials. Deviating from these norms will be regarded as a violation of the campus Honor Code.
Class participation
10 percent
All students should contribute to class discussions as active listeners, question-askers, commentators, and critics. Respectful disagreement with the instructor and fellow students is welcome and encouraged. Attendance will not be taken formally, but meaningful participation is not compatible with absence. Be prepared to discuss each week's assigned materials by the start of that week's first meeting.
Evaluation takes place at the midterm and the end of the course, with each evaluation period weighted equally. Evaluation is based on:
- Contributing comments and questions that advance the conversation
- Evidence of listening to others
- Engagement with assigned materials
Entrepreneurial events
10 percent
Part of the course is participation in two synchronous events in the Boulder entrepreneurial community—at least one on campus. Within 24 hours after each event, submit a discussion post in Canvas about your experience there. With this, include proof of participation (such as a photo of yourself there or of you and your screen). Evaluation criteria are as follows:
- Compelling proof of attendance at the event
- Insightful, 300-500 word reflection on an aspect of each event
- Engagement with at least one of the assigned materials in each analysis
Entrepreneurship-related events can be found at the campus Innovation & Entrepreneurship Initiative website, Silicon Flatirons, and Meetup.
Grading
Grading will follow the expectations stated in this syllabus.
If you need an extension on any assignment, consult your instructor ahead of time. Late projects will be penalized 5 percentage points per day.
Plagiarism and similar lapses in academic honesty can result in no credit for the assignment and referral to campus authorities.
Based on the stated percentage structure, grades will be awarded as follows: A (94-100), A- (90-93), B+ (87-89), B (83-86), B- (80-82), C+ (77-79), C (73-76), C- (70-72), D+ (67-69), D (63-66), D- (60-62), F (0-59). The minimum passing grade is 60 for undergraduates and 70 for graduate students.
Terms and conditions
Together, we agree to:
- Work together to foster a respectful, mature, convivial community based on mutual learning, diverse perspectives, and accommodation
- Adhere to all university policies regarding academic integrity, accessibility, behavior, discrimination, misconduct, inclusivity, and religious observances; we take responsibility for understanding them and the relevant procedures
- Respect student privacy, keeping any materials or statements shared in class confidential unless permission is granted to do otherwise
- Be present in our interactions together, keeping programs, tabs, and notifications unrelated to class off during meetings
If you find yourself in a position where lack of access to food, housing, health care, or other basic necessities interferes with your studies, consider seeking support from the Dean of Students and, if you feel comfortable doing so, your instructor. We will work to assist you however we can.
Topics
The course topics, like the assignments, proceed in three phases. First, we acquaint ourselves with some processes and ideologies associated with Silicon Valley-style entrepreneurial culture and discourses of disruption. Second, we consider the human impacts of disruptive change. Third, we explore a variety of strategies and shortcomings of disruptive and entrepreneurial thinking.
Except for the book we read in Phase Two, all readings should be available online. Some readings require using the university network (either on campus or via VPN).
Phase one: Disruption
What does this overused word even mean?
1. Startup communities
- Brad Feld, chapters 1-3 in Startup Communities: Building an Entrepreneurial Ecosystem in Your City (Wiley, 2012)
- Xiaowei R. Wang, “Letter from Shenzhen,” Logic(s) (April 1, 2018)
2. Theory and cliché
- Clayton M. Christensen, Michael E. Raynor, and Rory McDonald, “What Is Disruptive Innovation?,” Harvard Business Review (December 1, 2015)
- Jill Lepore, “The Disruption Machine,” New Yorker (June 23, 2014)
- Drake Bennett, “Clayton Christensen Responds to New Yorker Takedown of 'Disruptive Innovation',” Bloomberg (June 21, 2014)
3. Organizational vessels
- Venkatesh Rao, “A Brief History of the Corporation: 1600 to 2100,” Ribbonfarm (June 8, 2011)
- Jessica Livingston, “Grow the Puzzle Around You,” Posthaven (June 30, 2018)
4. Raising rounds
- Kim-Mai Cutler, “The Unicorn Hunters,” Logic(s) no. 4 (2018)
- Paul Graham, “Startup = Growth” (September 2012)
- Daisy Onubogu, “Underrepresented Founders are Merely Collateral Damage” (February 25, 2021)
5. Endgames
- Peter Thiel with Blake Masters, Zero to One: Notes on Startups, or How to Build the Future, chapters 4-5 (Crown Currency, 2014)
- Cory Doctorow, “Tiktok's Enshittification,” Pluralistic (January 21, 2023)
- Constance Grady, “How Does Elon Musk Get Away with It All?” Vox (Aug 17, 2023)
6. Capitalism, all along
- Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, preamble and chapter 1, Manifesto of the Communist Party (1848)
- Joseph A. Schumpeter, “The Creative Response in Economic History,” Journal of Economic History 7, no. 2 (November 1947)
Phase two: Disrupted
Phase two centers around how one company, Amazon, has disrupted US society, through the lens of one book, available in the bookstore:
- Alec MacGillis, Fulfillment: Winning and Losing in One-Click America (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2021)
7. The basement to security
- MacGillis, Fulfillment, “Introduction” to ch. 3
8. Dignity to power
- MacGillis, Fulfillment, ch. 4 to ch. 6
9. Shelter to overtime
- MacGillis, Fulfillment, ch. 7 to “Overtime”
Phase three: Disruptionism
What, then, can we do?
10. Disrupting work
- Ben Tarnoff, The Making of the Tech Worker Movement (Logic(s), 2020)
- Anisia Uzeyman and Saul Williams (dirs.), Neptune Frost (2021)
11. Disrupting capital
- Richard Barbrook and Andy Cameron, “The Californian Ideology,” Science as Culture 6, no. 1 (1996)
- Jennifer Brandel, Mara Zepeda, Astrid Scholz, and Aniyia Williams, “Zebras Fix What Unicorns Break” (March 8, 2017)
12. Disruptive citizenship
- Maria Mazzucato, “The Entrepreneurial State,” Soundings 49 (Winter 2011)
- Malka Older, “Temporary Organizations in Disaster Response: Crisis, Temporality, and Governance,” American Behavioral Scientist (2022)
13. Disrupting time
- Niles Eldredge and Stephen Jay Gould, “Punctuated Equilibria: An Alternative to Phyletic Gradualism,” in Schopf, T.J.M. (ed.), Models in Paleobiology (Freeman Cooper, 1972)
- Walidah Imarisha, “All Organizing Is Science Fiction,” History Department, University of Massachusetts Amherst (November 13, 2018)
14. Disruption Fantasies
- David Edgerton, “Introduction” and “Maintenance” in The Shock of the Old: Technology and Global History Since 1900 (Profile Books, 2008)
- Stefano Harney and Fred Moten, “Fantasy in the Hold” (pp. 84-99), The Undercommons: Fugitive Planning & Black Study (Minor Compositions, 2013)
Further resources
- How I Built This with Guy Raz, NPR podcast
- Resources, Sustainable Economies Law Center
- Startup School library, Y Combinator
[ Notes ]